The group, which comprises five caravans, about eight adults, some children and three dogs, did not leave Little Heath Common, off Mincing Lane, on Monday in breach of an order served by Surrey County Council. They arrived on Friday July 1 after being ordered to move from Chobham recreation ground by 4pm that day at a cost of £700 to the parish council. The woman, who received treatment at Woking Community Hospital for two dog bites to her leg, spoke to the News and Mail on condition we did not reveal her name. She said: “I got a bite which broke the skin and ripped my trousers. I am angry about it because it was completely unprovoked. “They have got three dogs running around there. It has made it a no-go area. I certainly would not go there again until they have gone.” The resident said she was angry when police failed to contact her after she reported the incident and added she thought the police were treading lightly so as not to provoke the travellers. Jim Dakin, resident for 16 years of a house that shares its right of way with Little Heath’s, echoed the woman’s concerns that police are not following up complaints against the travellers. He said he was turning on to Mincing Lane at about 10.30am on the Friday when he saw the caravans approaching. He immediately guessed the travellers’ destination and attempted to block access to the site by parking his car across the entrance. He said: “I phoned the police and while I was calling one of the women got in my vehicle, started it and tried to move it. “While the vehicle was moving I jumped in and snatched the keys out. They tried to push my vehicle out of the way and she was screaming obscenities all the time. “They tried to move the caravan around it and a man stood in front of my vehicle and I moved it forward very slowly and he started kicking the front of my vehicle.” Mr Dakin said he reported the incident to the police and wanted the travellers charged with driving his vehicle without consent and causing criminal damage to a post they drove over to get to the site. Surrey Police said no charges were being brought against the travellers, stating they had not damaged the post and had only removed and replaced it to gain access to the field. The spokesman added the car had been driven for too short a time for them to press charges and discouraged residents from taking matters into their own hands. In response, Mr Dakin said: “I am not anti-gipsy. I just want them to abide by the law. At the moment we have two laws — one for us and one for them.” Malcolm Mathew, property inspector for the county council, said an order to leave the site by Monday had been delayed because the travellers had to attend a funeral. He said the next step, as the travellers had failed to leave, was to apply for a summons to Woking magistrates to have them evicted. When the News and Mail visited the site there were no adult travellers available to comment.